Data from: The genetic contribution to sex determination and number of sex chromosomes vary among populations of common frogs (Rana temporaria)
The patterns of sex determination and sex differentiation have been shown to differ among geographic populations of common frogs. Notably, the association between phenotypic sex and linkage group 2 (LG2) has been found to be perfect in a northern Swedish population, but weak and variable among famil...
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Zusammenfassung: | The patterns of sex determination and sex differentiation have been shown
to differ among geographic populations of common frogs. Notably, the
association between phenotypic sex and linkage group 2 (LG2) has been
found to be perfect in a northern Swedish population, but weak and
variable among families in a southern one. By analyzing these populations
with markers from other linkage groups, we bring two new insights: (1) the
variance in phenotypic sex not accounted for by LG2 in the southern
population could not be assigned to genetic factors on other linkage
groups, suggesting an epigenetic component to sex determination; (2) a
second linkage group (LG7) was found to co-segregate with sex and LG2 in
the northern population. Given the very short timeframe since post-glacial
colonization (in the order of 1000 generations) and its seemingly
localized distribution, this neo-sex chromosome system might be the
youngest one described so far. It does not result from a fusion, but more
likely from a reciprocal translocation between the original Y chromosome
(LG2) and an autosome (LG7), causing their co-segregation during male
meiosis. By generating a strict linkage between several important genes
from the sex-determination cascade (Dmrt1, Amh and Amhr2), this neo-sex
chromosome possibly contributes to the 'differentiated sex race'
syndrome (strictly genetic sex determination and early gonadal
development) that characterizes this northern population. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.253h0 |